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Journal of Virology, January 2008, p. 692-699, Vol. 82, No. 2
0022-538X/08/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JVI.01155-07
Copyright © 2008, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

Graduate Institute of Clinical Medicine,1 Graduate Institute of Microbiology, College of Medicine, National Taiwan University,2 Hepatitis Research Center, National Taiwan University Hospital, Taipei, Taiwan3
Received 28 May 2007/ Accepted 24 October 2007
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The exact molecular mechanism for HDV RNA replication is still obscure. A double rolling-circle mechanism for HDV replication has been proposed (for reviews, see references 18 and 32). In this model, HDV genomic RNA undergoes RNA-dependent RNA synthesis to produce a multimeric intermediate, and it is then processed to the circular, unit-length complement of the genomic RNA, termed the antigenome. The antigenomic RNA serves as a template for the synthesis of genomic RNA via the same rolling-circle mechanism. Since HDV does not encode its RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (Pol) and HDAg does not possess any RNA Pol activity, the host RNA Pol is likely to be redirected for HDV replication. Some recent studies suggested that replication of HDV RNA is carried out by two different cellular RNA Pols, Pol II and Pol I (20, 22, 24). The two RNA Pols reside in different subcellular locations, and HDV replication has to move accordingly. In fact, during the replication cycle, HDV ribonucleoprotein (RNP) indeed shuttles between the nucleolus, nucleus, nucleoplasm, and cytoplasm (31). The observation that HDV RNA accumulated only in the cytoplasm and was translocated into the nucleus in the presence of HDAg suggested that viral RNA movement is mediated by HDAg (8). To study the effect of intranuclear locations of HDAg on viral RNA replication, we introduced a heterogeneous nucleolar localization signal (NoLS) from the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) Rev protein (3, 15) to SHDAg (Fig. 1) to restrict its localization and then analyzed its effect on HDV replication. When SHDAg was fused with the NoLS motif and mainly localized in nucleoli, we found that the initiation of genomic RNA synthesis, but not that of antigenomic RNA synthesis, was abolished. Drug treatment by actinomycin D to release the SHDAg-NoLS mutant from nucleoli could partially restore the replication of genomic RNA. These data suggest that subcellular localization of SHDAg affects its ability to support the initiation of HDV RNA replication and that the replication of the two polarities of HDV viral RNA occurs in different subcellular sites.
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FIG. 1. Schematic diagram of SHDAg and its mutants. Clones d-2 and d-3 were derived from SHDAg with the C terminus fused with the NoLS of the HIV Rev protein.
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Site-directed mutagenesis of SHDAg. Site-directed mutagenesis was performed by a QuickChange site-directed mutagenesis lit (Stratagene). Plasmid pCDAg-S was used as mutagenesis template for SHDAg-NoLS mutants. The mutagenic primers used for the addition of Rev NoLS to the 3' terminus of SHDAg CDNA (Fig. 1, clone d-2) were 5'-CGAAGGAATAGAAGAAGAAGGTGGAGAGAGAGACAGAGATAGGATATACTCTTCCCAGCC-3' and 5'-CTCTCTCCACCTTCTTCTTCTATTCCTTCGAGCCTGTCTTGGAAATCCCTGGTTTCCCCTGATG-3'. After DNA synthesis by Pfu Ultra DNA Pol, the reaction mixture was treated with restriction enzyme DpnI to digest template plasmids and then transformed to E. coli competent cells. These pCDAg-S-d-2 mutant clones were confirmed by sequence analysis. Plasmid pCDAg-S-d-3 was derived from pCDAg-S-d-2 with the primer set 5'-CGAAGGAATAGAAGAAGAAGGTGGTAGGATATACTCTTCCCAGCC-3'and 5'-CCACCTTCTTCTTCTATTCCTTCGTGGAAATCCCTGGTTTCCCCTGATG-3'. pCDAg-S-d-2(–) and pCDAg-S-d-3(–) contained the d-2 ORF and d-3 ORF in opposite orientations, respectively, and were used for in vitro transcription of d-2 mRNA and d-3 mRNA.
DNA transfection and RNA transfection. DNA transfection was performed with using Lipofectamine 2000 (Invitrogen) according to the manufacturer's instructions as described previously (27). For cotransfection, the ratio of cDNA of SHDAg or its NoLS mutants to HDV RNA templates pCDm2G or pCDm2AG was 1:3. For the RNA transient transfection experiment, in vitro transcribed RNAs were transfected into Huh7 cells by DMRIE-C transfection reagent (Invitrogen), according to the manufacturer's instructions, as described elsewhere (23). An experiment for the initiation of HDV RNA replication was performed according to the method of a previous study (22) with some modifications. Briefly, 10 µg of in vitro transcribed HDV genomic or antigenomic RNAs together with 0.25 µg of capped mRNA of SHDAg or 0.5 µg of capped mRNA of SHDAg-NoLS mutants was used to transfected 2 x 106 Huh7 cells in a 60-mm dish. Transfected cells were incubated overnight and passaged equally to two dishes. Cells were then either left untreated or were treated with 0.1 µg/ml actinomycin D for 8 h. After drug treatment, cells were washed twice with phosphate-buffered saline (PBS), which was replaced with fresh medium without actinomycin D. Cells were harvested for analysis at day 6 posttransfection.
Coimmunoprecipitation. Huh7 cells transfected with SHDAg or its mutants were harvested and lysed with radioimmunoprecipitation assay buffer (25 mM Tris-HCl pH 7.6, 150 mM NaCl, 1% NP-40, 1% sodium deoxycholate, 0.1% sodium dodecyl sulfate [SDS]) at 48 h posttransfection. For actinomycin D treatment, 0.1 µg/ml drug was added at 42 h posttransfection. Lysates were precipitated with rabbit anti-HDAg antibody-conjugated protein G-Sepharose (packed volume, 20 µl; Pierce). The immunoprecipitates were washed with PBS buffer containing 0.3% NP-40 and processed for SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and immunoblotting analysis.
Western blot analysis. Lysates of transfected cells or immunoprecipitated proteins were subjected to electrophoresis in SDS-polyacrylamide gels, followed by a Western blotting procedure, as described previously (27). HDAg was detected with rabbit polyclonal antibody or mouse monoclonal antibody against HDAg. RNA Pol II was detected with a monoclonal antibody against the C-terminal domain of RNA Pol II (8WG16; Abcam). RNA Pol I was detected with a polyclonal antibody against N-terminal amino acids 1 to 300 of RPA194 (Santa Cruz). Cellular actin was detected with a mouse monoclonal antibody against C-terminal actin (Santa Cruz). After incubation with the secondary antibody conjugated to horseradish peroxidase, the blots were developed by a Western Lightning ECL blot detection system (Perkin Elmer).
Indirect immunofluorescence. Huh7 cells that transiently expressed wild-type or SHDAg-NoLS mutants were grown on coverslips and then fixed with 3.7% paraformaldehyde at 48 h posttransfection. For actinomycin D treatment, 0.1 µg/ml drug was added at 42 h posttransfection. After extraction with CSK buffer (50 mM NaCl, 300 mM sucrose, 10 mM PIPES [piperazine-N,N'-bis(2-ethanesulfonic acid] pH 6.8, 3 mM MgCl2, 0.5% Triton X-100) for 5 min, cells were blocked in PBS containing 1% bovine serum albumin for 1 h at room temperature. Cells were then immunostained with rabbit anti-HDAg antiserum together with monoclonal anti-nucleolin or anti-heterogeneous nuclear RNP (hnRNP) C1/C2 antibodies for 1 h at room temperature, followed by fluorescein isothiocyanate-conjugated rabbit anti-mouse immunoglobulin G or rhodamine-conjugated rabbit anti-rabbit immunoglobulin G for another 1 h. After PBS washing, the coverslips were mounted on glass slides with Vectashield (Vector Laboratory, Inc., Burlingame, CA) and observed with an immunofluorescence microscope (Leica).
In vitro transcription. For RNA transfection of HDV RNA, genomic RNAs and antigenomic RNAs were transcribed in vitro from HindIII-linearized plasmids pCD2G and pCD2AG, respectively, with a T7 MEGAscript transcription kit (Ambion) (26). Capped mRNAs for SHDAg and its mutants were prepared by in vitro transcription using the T7 mMESSAGE mMACHINE (Ambion) transcription kit. For detection of HDV genomic and antigenomic RNA, digoxigenin (DIG)-labeled strand-specific probes for HDV genomic and antigenomic RNAs were prepared by in vitro transcriptions of HindIII-linearized pCD2G and pCD2AG using T7 Pol with a DIG Northern starter kit (Roche).
RNA preparation and Northern blotting. Total RNAs from Huh7 cells were extracted by using TRIzol reagent (Invitrogen) according to the instructions of the supplier. For Northern blot analysis, total cellular RNA samples were subjected to electrophoresis on a 6% formaldehyde-1% agarose RNA gel and then transferred into a nylon filter and cross-linked. The filter was prehybridized and then hybridized with DIG-labeled HDV genomic and antigenomic RNA probes, respectively, according to the instructions of the supplier (DIG Northern starter kit; Roche).
Heterokaryon assay. Expression plasmids for the d-2 mutant were used to transfect Huh7 cells seeded on coverslips. Transfected cells were treated with 40 µg/ml emetine at 40 h posttransfection and then mixed with mouse NIH 3T3 cells. After coculturing for 3 h, cell fusion was induced by rinsing cells in PBS and then adding a drop of polyethylene glycerol (PEG 1500; Roche); cells were incubated for 2 min and washed twice in PBS. Cells were then further incubated in fresh medium in the presence of 40 µg/ml emetine. Five hours after heterokaryon formation, cells were fixed with 3.7% paraformaldehyde for indirect immunofluorescence staining and analyzed with immunofluorescence microscopy.
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FIG. 2. Subcellular localization of SHDAg and NoLS-fused mutants. Expression plasmids of SHDAg (clone d) or its NoLS-fused constructs (clones d-2 and d-3) were used to transfect Huh7 cells with or without the expression plasmid of the cDNA dimer of the HDV genome (pCDm2G) or antigenome (pCDm2AG) with a two-base deletion in the SHDAg ORF. Transfected cells were fixed 2 days posttransfection and analyzed with an immunofluorescence assay. Composite, merge of SHDAg and nucleolin images.
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FIG. 3. A heterokaryon assay demonstrated that subcellular localization of the SHDAg-NoLS mutant was confined to the nucleolus. Huh7 cells seeded on coverslips were cotransfected with 3 µg of pCDm2AG as well as 1 µg of the expression plasmid of SHDAg (d+AG) or clone d-2 (d-2+AG). The transfected cells were incubated and then fused with NIH 3T3 cells (see Materials and Methods). Five hours after heterokaryon formation, cells were fixed and analyzed by immunofluorescence microscopy. Frames I to III in panels A and B are merged images of the immunofluorescence results as follows: frames I, SHDAg and human hnRNP C (C1/C2); frames II, SHDAg and DAPI (4',6'-diamidino-2-phenylindole) staining; and frames III, human hnRNP C (C1/C2) and DAPI staining. White lines mark cell boundaries.
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To circumvent the problem, we used an RNA transfection method to initiate replication by cointroducing in vitro transcribed SHDAg-NoLS mRNA together with dimeric HDV RNA and monitored the replication of viral RNA. Because the transfected HDV RNAs were wild type and able to express SHDAg after the RNA replication cycle, we could investigate if the SHDAg-NoLS mutant supported the initiation of HDV RNA replication. By this approach, the SHDAg-NoLS mutant was found to be able to support the initiation of antigenomic RNA synthesis and the expression of SHDAg when genomic RNA template was cotransfected (Fig. 4A, lanes 4 and 5). However, the SHDAg-NoLS mutant could not facilitate the initiation of HDV genomic RNA synthesis (Fig. 4B, lanes 4 and 5). Since the localization of the SHDAg-NoLS mutant is in nucleoli, these results suggest that the initiation of HDV antigenomic RNA, but not that of genomic RNA, occurs in nucleoli. Combined with the previous finding that newly synthesized antigenomic RNAs were localized in nucleoli (20), this result suggests that the synthesis of antigenomic RNA occurs in nucleoli.
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FIG. 4. SHDAg-NoLS mutant could support the initiation of HDV antigenomic RNA synthesis but not that of genomic RNA synthesis. (A) In vitro transcribed mRNAs of SHDAg (clone d) or SHDAg-NoLS mutants (clones d-2 and d-3) were cotransfected with HDV genomic RNA to Huh7 cells. Cellular RNAs and proteins were extracted 6 days posttransfection, and the expression of HDV antigenomic RNA and HDAg was analyzed. (B) The same as the experiment as shown in panel A except that antigenomic RNA was used for transfection. G, genomic; AG, antigenomic; P, positive control; N, untransfected cells; , anti; WB, Western blotting.
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To address this question, we tried to move the SHDAg-NoLS mutant from nucleoli to nucleoplasm and then tested our hypothesis that the NoLS-fused SHDAg mutant still possessed the ability to support the initiation of HDV genomic RNA synthesis and that its failure to support HDV genomic RNA synthesis was due to its nucleolar localization and inaccessibility to the components/machinery for genomic RNA synthesis. Introducing plasmid pCDm2AG in this experiment clearly revealed the distribution patterns of SHDAg and its mutant with antigenomic RNA after drug treatment. Some reagents had been demonstrated to be able to release nucleolar proteins into the nucleoplasm (9, 10, 14, 30). Actinomycin D is one of these and does not affect HDV RNA synthesis (22). So, we first treated SHDAg-NoLS mutant-transfected cells with actinomycin D to investigate the localization of the mutant. This mutant was distributed normally in nucleoli (Fig. 2d). As expected, when transfected cells were treated with actinomycin D, the SHDAg-NoLS mutant was translocated into nucleoplasm (Fig. 5f).
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FIG. 5. Actinomycin D treatment could induce the export of SHDAg and its mutants from the nucleolus. Expression plasmids for SHDAg (clone d) or its NoLS-fused mutant (clone d-2) were used to transfect Huh7 cells with the expression plasmid of the cDNA dimer of the HDV antigenome (AGm) with a two-base deletion in the SHDAg ORF (pCDm2AG). Transfected cells were treated with 0.1 µg/ml actinomycin D at 42 h posttransfection, fixed at 48 h posttransfection, and then analyzed by immunofluorescence assay. Composite I, merged image of the results of HDAg and nucleolin staining; composite II, merged image of the results of HDAg and DAPI (4',6'-diamidino-2-phenylindole) staining.
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FIG. 6. Actinomycin D treatment partially rescued the ability of SHDAg-NoLS to facilitate the initiation of HDV genomic RNA (G RNA) synthesis from antigenomic RNA. In vitro transcribed mRNAs of SHDAg (clone d) or clone d-2 were cotransfected with HDV antigenomic RNAs to Huh7 cells. After overnight incubation, the transfected cells were reseeded and treated with 0.1 µg/ml actinomycin D (ActD) for 8 h. Cellular RNA and proteins were extracted 6 days posttransfection, and the expression levels of HDV antigenomic RNA and HDAg were analyzed. P, positive control; N, protein samples from untransfected cells; WB, Western blotting; , anti.
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FIG. 7. Interaction of SHDAg-NoLS mutant and cellular RNA Pol II. (A) Huh7 cells transfected with expression plasmids for SHDAg (clone d) or clone d-2 were harvested at 48 h posttransfection. Cells were lysed with radioimmunoprecipitation assay buffer, and the lysates were immunoprecipitated with anti-HDAg antibodies. The precipitants were analyzed. (B) The same experiment as shown in panel A except that the transfected cells were treated with 0.1 µg/ml actinomycin D (ActD) at 42 h posttransfection. P, positive control; H7, untransfected Huh7 cells; WB, Western blotting; IP, immunoprecipitation; , anti.
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HDV RNP has been demonstrated to shuttle between the nucleus and cytoplasm (31), while HDV RNA alone (without antigen) accumulated only in the cytoplasm. However, in the presence of SHDAg, the HDV RNA was translocated into the nucleus, suggesting that nuclear import of HDV RNA is mediated by SHDAg (8). In this study, we found that SHDAg fused with NoLS did not accumulate in the nucleoplasm and could not support the synthesis of HDV genomic RNA (Fig. 4B). Since the chimeric SHDAg-NoLS may translocate HDV RNP into nucleoli, this finding suggests that such RNA synthesis does not occur in nucleoli. This is likely to be the case since the NoLS-fused mutant does not lose its ability to facilitate the initiation of genomic RNA synthesis (Fig. 6, lane 7). Furthermore, after actinomycin D treatment to induce the nucleoplasmic distribution of the mutant, the mutant is able to interact with RNA Pol II (Fig. 7B, lane 7), which, according to previous studies, carries out the synthesis of genomic RNA (5, 6, 11, 12, 24, 25, 33), after actinomycin D treatment to induce the nucleoplasmic distribution of the mutant. These data support the model that Pol II mediates the synthesis of genomic RNA in nuclei.
A SHDAg-NoLS mutant confined in the nucleoli could support the initiation of HDV antigenomic RNA synthesis (Fig. 4A, lanes 4 and 5), indicating that the machinery mediating HDV antigenomic RNA synthesis can localize in nucleoli. It is unlikely that the nucleoplasmic Pol machinery (Pol II), which is responsible for genomic RNA synthesis, can associate with the mutant to translocate into nucleoli to carry out antigenomic RNA synthesis since the coimmunoprecipitation experiment clearly demonstrated that Pol II did not interact with the SHDAg mutant when it was retained in nucleoli (Fig. 7A, lane 7). Although we cannot exclude the possibility that a small number of genomic RNA-SHDAg-NoLS RNPs were translocated to the nucleoplasm and support antigenomic RNA replication there, it is quite unlikely because the differences in the accumulated antigenomic RNAs (Fig. 4B, lanes 3 to 5) did not reflect the dramatic differences in quantity between wild-type SHDAgs and the possible contamination of SHDAg-NoLS mutants in the nucleoplasmic fractions (Fig. 2a, d, and g).
HDV is a viroid-like animal pathogen and replicates its RNA in a similar rolling-circle mechanism. It is noteworthy that the negative-strand RNA of such a viroid was localized in the nucleoplasm, whereas its positive-strand RNA was localized in the nucleolus as well as in the nucleoplasm with distinct spatial patterns (28). Several lines of evidence support the idea that replications of HDV RNAs are carried out by two different RNA Pols in different subcellular localizations. First, studies from Lai's laboratory had demonstrated that machineries that carried out the synthesis of genomic RNA and antigenomic RNA had different sensitivities to alpha-amanitin, indicating there are two different enzyme activities involved (22, 24). Second, two polarities of HDV viral RNAs showed different subcellular distribution patterns (1). Li et al. recently also demonstrated that the newly synthesized antigenomic RNA was detected mainly in nucleoli, indicating that nucleolar machinery carries out antigenomic RNA replication through genomic RNA (20). In addition, two studies also revealed that nucleolar proteins may affect HDV replication. Nucleolar proteins, such as B23 (16) and nucleolin (19), had been found to enhance HDV RNA replication. Interestingly, these two proteins can affect cellular RNA Pol I-mediated ribosome biogenesis and form complexes with HDAg. Furthermore, it had been found that RNA Pol II and the Pol I-associated transcription factor SL1 could be precipitated with HDAg, suggesting the association of HDV replication complex with the Pol I and Pol II transcription machineries (20). These data combined with ours suggest that nucleolar Pol (RNA Pol I or others) might mediate the synthesis of antigenomic RNA. Although we did not find the associations of RNA Pol I with SHDAg or its NoLS-fused mutant by a coimmunoprecipitation assay, more studies are required to judge whether Pol I is involved in HDV RNA replication. A recent report demonstrated that RNA Pol II interacts with HDV-derived RNA from both polarities of HDV RNA (13). However, the study was an interaction in vitro rather than an initiation or replication. Furthermore, the Pol II-HDV genomic RNA complex may be responsible for the synthesis of HDAg mRNA instead of the synthesis of antigenomic RNA. Moreover, it has been suggested that the transcription of the mRNA and the replication of the HDV genome are independent processes and occur concurrently (23). As synthesis of both antigenomic RNA and HDAg mRNA uses genomic RNA as a template, it is quite likely that HDV coordinates the two processes by carrying them out in different subcellular localizations with different RNA synthesis machineries.
In summary, the data are in agreement with the idea that the replication of HDV antigenomic RNA, in contrast to genomic RNA, occurs in nucleoli. RNA Pol II is suggested to be the Pol responsible for genomic RNA replication in the nucleoplasm. Further studies are required to identify the possible cellular RNA Pol responsible for HDV antigenomic RNA synthesis.
Published ahead of print on 7 November 2007. ![]()
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